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These strong, heavy projectiles take the ’06 into a new dimension
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These strong, heavy projectiles take the ’06 into a new dimension
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It isn’t often that a hunting case pops up in the United States Supreme Court, but that is just what has happened with a 2014 case that crosses Montana and Wyoming state lines, into a National Forest, and involves the harvest of an elk.
It’s a complicated case that combines natural resources, history, poaching accusations, and treaties hundreds of years old between the Native American tribe and the federal government. The case was just won by a Crow tribal member, and the implications could stand to affect the way hunting, and wildlife management, is viewed moving forward.
We’ll try to break this complicated treaty rights court case down so that it’s easier to understand.
As we noted, this case dates to 2014, when Clayvin Herrera was hunting elk on the Montana/Wyoming border. He and his hunting partners started on the Montana side in the Crow Native American reservation. An elk was shot and fled, jumping the fence to Wyoming and the Bighorn National Forest.
The group took three elk in total out of the forest, which they reportedly ate that winter.
However, Herrera didn’t have a Wyoming hunting license, and it was a closed season at the time. As a result, in 2015, Herrera and his friends were all charged with poaching by the state. Herrera’s friends pled guilty and paid fines in the case. Herrera’s case went to a jury that found him guilty and he was given a year of probation, was fined $8,000 and lost hunting privileges for the next three years.
The case went to appellate court and then the State of Wyoming’s Supreme Court. Both courts upheld Herrera’s conviction. After that, there was only one place it could go: The U.S. Supreme Court. It’s more than just interesting that a case like this got the highest court in the land. It’s downright fascinating, it all has to do with treaty hunting rights and a 151-year-old agreement between Crow tribal members and the U.S.
In building Herrera’s defense, his legal team brought into play a written agreement from back in 1868. The Treaty of Fort Laramie was an agreement between the Crow tribe of Native Americans and the U.S. government that established the Crow reservation on the border.
Here is where things start to get complicated. The Treaty of Fort Laramie also contained wording that protected the tribe’s hunting rights in their traditional homeland. This part is key, because technically that traditional homeland was much larger than the reservation and spilled over the Wyoming border to the area Herrera and his fellow tribe members shot the elk.
As a result, Herrera’s defense argued that as a member of the Crow tribe, state law did not apply to him as he was exercising his right to hunt as laid out by the Treaty of Fort Laramie.
A legal issue like this is sort of like a cake; there are many differing layers to it. Part of the Treaty of Laramie’s legal language also included a phrase dictating that those hunting rights remained valid so long as the areas remained “unoccupied lands of the United States.”
This “unoccupied lands” terminology became another key part of the case. Wyoming’s statehood was not established until 1890, and the establishment of the Bighorn National Forest didn’t happen until 1897. The state argued that once the National Forest was established, that area ceased to be “unoccupied.”
Another ruling, known as the Crow Tribe of Indians v. Repsis, was used as further argument for that sentiment. In that case it was ruled that Fort Laramie became invalid the moment Wyoming became a state. This case was preceded by another ruling (Ward v. Race Horse) that basically said the same thing.
This entire case comes down to precedence with similar cases. Historically, the courts have ruled with Native Americans in these cases, but the one closest to Herrera v. Wyoming is the case of Minnesota v. Mille Lacs Band of Chippewa Indians in 1990. This was the situation that the Supreme Court cited in their decision, because they also said that case repudiated the decision of Ward v. Race Horse.
Minnesota v. Mille Lacs Band of Chippewa Indians also involved the hunting and fishing rights of tribal members outside the confines of a reservation. When the Chippewa signed the Treaty of St. Peters in 1837, it also contained similar wording to the Fort Laramie treaty that allowed tribal members to hunt outside the confines of the reservation.
Likewise, the state tried to rule that once Minnesota officially became a state, the tribe’s hunting rights expired outside of the reservation’s borders.
This case got quite a bit more complicated than that, but all you really need to know is that the Chippewa won the case because the Supreme Court ruled that the tribe’s treaty rights could only be ended by Congress. The Supreme Court decided the same rules applied to Herrera v. Wyoming. The result was a 5-4 majority decision. Voting with the tribe were Justice Sonia Sotomayor, Elena Kagan, Ruth Bader Ginsburg, Stephen Breyer and Neil Gorsuch.
Thank you to all who supported me and helped along the way, There is a lot of you n I appreciate everything you have done, are doing, n will do, aho
Posted by Clayvin Herrera on Monday, May 20, 2019
While Herrera did win the case, with the court ruling the tribe’s rights under the treaty were still valid, there is another wrinkle to this story. The Supreme Court also ruled that “Wyoming could regulate the exercise of the 1868 Treaty right ‘in the interest of conservation.'”
Basically, this means the case will likely go back to Wyoming state courts where there will likely be more debate and discussions with state officials and tribe members.
It is definitely an interesting case. Considering the long history of conflict between states and tribes over hunting and fishing rights, we wouldn’t be surprised to see more conflict between Indian tribes and the state over exactly how Wyoming will attempt to enact any regulations over the tribe’s hunting activities.
For more outdoor content from Travis Smola, be sure to follow him on Twitter and check out his Geocaching and Outdoors with Travis Youtube channels.
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The post An Explanation of the Supreme Court's Decision on the Wyoming Elk Hunting Case appeared first on Wide Open Spaces.
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https://www.wideopenspaces.com/unbelievable-footage-shows-giant-shark-circling-florida-swimmer/
Maybe the fear of sharks came as a direct result of the famed motion picture, “Jaws” back in the day. Maybe there was an inability for sharks to escape the stigma of being vicious killers, and subsequently an inevitability of overreaction and dramatization.
But while people definitely tend to overreact when swimming at the beach, this time was undoubtedly different. Imagine sitting on your hotel balcony and watching this situation develop.
In this video, we see someone swimming around in water while a shark is circling, moving in closer and closer.
The people filming from a distance are too far to get the swimmer’s attention, resulting in a bone-chilling piece of footage.
Watch the video below:
What would you do in this situation if you were the one behind the phone or on one of the other balconies? First and foremost, I think I’d immediately stop filming. I don’t know about y’all, but I was pretty confident that was about to end ugly.
Stan Battles, who was filming from the 28th floor of the Tidewater Resort Wednesday morning, was fighting the same thoughts.
“You don’t want to write what I was thinking,” he told the Austin American-Statesman. “I just didn’t want the girl to get hurt.”
There’s really nothing to do but to hope they can hear you yelling, is there?
What would you do if you were the swimmer and you could faintly hear “Shark!” off in the distance? Would you start swimming as fast as possible?
I will say, the freakiest part of this is that it happened at Panama City Beach, Florida. You know people go swimming in this water all the time, so seeing that big of a shark just casually swimming around is enough to give anyone chills.
“The woman swims directly over this thing,” Battles said. “Directly over it.”
However, how sure are we that the video shows a shark? Could it possibly be something else?
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Posted from: http://huntinginsider.com/warne-honors-the-passing-of-its-founder/
John Llewellyn Warne April 6, 1923 – May 21, 2019 Tualatin, OR, May 29, 2019-Warne Scope Mounts honors the passing of its founder and firearms industry icon, John (Jack) Llewellyn Warne. Jack, as he preferred to be called, passed away at home May 21, 2019, in the presence of his wife of 72 years, Marjory […]
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https://www.fieldandstream.com/an-auto-5-that-has-us-stumped?dom=rss-default&src=syn
This high-grade version of an old favorite is a bit of a mystery
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Posted from: http://huntinginsider.com/now-shipping-thermion-thermal-riflescopes/
(MANSFIELD, TEXAS) – Pulsar brought true superiority to SHOT Show 2019, with the unveiling of the new Thermion Thermal Riflescope. Pulsar will begin distributing limited quantities of Thermions starting with XM models this month. Pulsar has set a new milestone with the Thermion with its traditional riflescope design. The cutting-edge thermal optic provides hunters clarity […]
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A school of more than 250 extinct fish specimens was killed and subsequently discovered as a unique limestone fossil, according to researchers and a new study from Arizona State University and Mizuta Memorial Museum in Japan.
The school of fish was discovered in the Green River Formation, a fossil hotbed located in western Colorado, eastern Utah and southwestern Wyoming. The find inspired intensive studying, and these 259 individual Erismatopterus levatus are helping prove that fish grouped together in schools as far back as 50 million years. This particular extinct species lived in the Green River area during the Eocene period, a full 56 to 34 million years ago.
The fossil shows the fish swimming in the same direction, tightly bunched and likely working together.
All of the fish supposedly died at the same time, and the ones that created the fossilized slab of limestone were juveniles. Nonetheless, the researchers measured their size (most of the tiny fish were smaller than 20 millimeters), mapped their positioning, and were able to run simulations on the shoal’s movement.
The running hypothesis is that a sand dune fell and crushed the entirety of the swimming school simultaneously.
The idea that fish have been schooling, likely as a way to protect the group from predation, had yet to be technically proven, but this will go a long way in providing insight to the way of life these species experienced.
Th incredible fossil discovery might even help anglers in pursuit of game fish, confirming the idea that fish schools can trigger a lot of reaction from larger predators. Perhaps it’s something you already know, but scientific confirmation can be beneficial.
Seeing that an entire school of fish was swimming around in prehistoric water bodies, much like modern fish do today, is pretty cool to imagine.
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Keep a dry change of hunting clothes at the ready in bad weather with the new waterproof, breathable Renegade X stuff sacks from ALPS OutdoorZ.
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Here are the most popular boat monikers
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https://www.wideopenspaces.com/coast-to-coast-waterfall-guide-30-stops-for-your-summer-road-trip/
The United States is known to possess some of the world’s most jaw dropping waterfalls, both off-the-beaten path and as popular tourist destinations. So, as you start planning out your summer road trips, take a minute to scout out some of these natural wonders that are well-worth a stop off the road or a hike up the mountain..
There’s a fascination with waterfalls that’s undeniable. Look to Instagram or any other social platform and #waterfalls will populate millions of results. But what many people don’t realize is that there’s a multitude of shapes, sizes and types of waterfalls out there–each factor contributing to what makes these natural beauties unique and jaw dropping.
In fact, there are ten different waterfall classifications: plunge, multi-step, cataract, frozen, fan, horsetail, chute, punchbowl, cascade and block. Most people are familiar with plunge waterfalls–those with long vertical streams that empty into a body of water at their end that’s perfect for swimming.
Depending on where you live, a waterfall classification that is unfamiliar to some is frozen. These waterfalls stand still like statues and are formed of long, strong icicles. Many frozen waterfalls can be found along the East Coast–although you’ll be more likely to witness these in the depths of winter.
So, you’ve heard enough about waterfall classifications. Now it’s time to actually scout out the best locations and start planning your visit by road trip. To help you pick and choose from the thousands of waterfalls across our beautiful country.
Car Rentals put together this infographic and Google maps guide that highlights some 30 incredible waterfalls to visit from coast to coast.
Whether you’re from the Northeast, Midwest or West Coast, this guide has destinations in nearly every U.S. region. It’s your one stop shop for waterfall sightseeing. Within the infographic, you’ll find information like swim access, hiking difficulty and admission cost (where applicable) to help plan out the perfect adventure this summer. For example, one waterfall that hits all these bases is Moss Glen Falls, located on the East Coast in Vermont. This horsetail waterfall has swim access, an easy hike difficulty level, and is free to the public, making it a popular waterfall destination for families or people on a tight summer budgets.
They’ve even pinpointed the exact location of all 30 waterfalls, so if you’re ambitious enough, you might try checking them all off your summer road trip list!
So what do you think? Some are a short walk from a nice parking area, others are in the backcountry of a state park. When you’re ready to visit a breath-taking waterfall, now you have the guide to help you do it!
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